1st Edition
The Routledge Research Companion to Digital Medieval Literature
Working across literature, history, theory and practice, this volume offers insight into the specific digital tools and interfaces, as well as the modalities, theories and forms, central to some of the most exciting new research and critical, scholarly and artistic production in medieval and pre-modern studies. Addressing more general themes and topics, such as digitzation, media studies, digital humanities and "big data," the new essays in this companion also focus on more than twenty-five keywords, such as "access," "code," "virtual," "interactivity" and "network." A useful website hosts examples, links and materials relevant to the book.
Introduction
Resistance in the Materials
Jen E. Boyle and Helen J. Burgess
Part I: The Digital and Medieval (New) Media
- The Remanence of Medieval Media
Martin Foys - Romancing the Portal: MappaMundi and the Global Middle Ages
Geraldine Heng - Creative Destruction and the Digital Humanities
Whitney Trettien - Augmenting Chaucer: Augmented Reality and Medieval Texts
Andrea R. Harbin, Tamara F. O’Callaghan, Alan B. Craig and Ryan W. Rocha - What is Piers Plowman?
Timothy L. Stinson - Working and Playing on The Middle Shore
Lara Farina and Katherine Richards - Telling Stories: Historical Narratives in Virtual Reality
Roger Louis Martínez-Dávila, Paddington Hodza, Mubbasir Kapadia, Sean T. Perrone, Christoph Hölscher, and Victor R. Schinazi - Toward Text-Mining the Middle Ages: Digital Scriptoria and Networks of Labor
Michael Widner - Knowledge Integration and Visuality Then and Now
Christine McWebb - Medieval Manuscripts and their (Digital) Afterlives
Toby Burrows - Remediation and 3D Design: Immediacy and the Medieval Video Game World
Roger Louis Martínez-Dávila and Lynn Ramey - Multispectral Imaging and Medieval Manuscripts
Eric Weiskott - Emotions3D: Remediating the Digital Museum
Jane-Heloise Nancarrow - Digital Cartographies of the Roman Campagna
Lisa Beaven, Katrina Grant and Mitchell Whitelaw - Modern Pictures of Medieval Pages: The Current State of Digital Work on Medieval and Early Modern Watermarks
S. C. Kaplan - Digitalizing Utopia: A Case Study of its Pedagogical Value in Historic Studies
Tessa Morrison - Thine Enemy: Virtual Reality and Narrative Space in Medieval Representations of Interpersonal Combat
Michael Ovens
Part II: Remediating Medieval Literature
Part III: Medieval Materialities, Digital Modalities
Part IV: "Screening" the Medieval: Visualization and Modes of Interoperability
Part V: Current Conversations
Biography
Jennifer E. Boyle is Professor at Coastal Carolina University, USA. She has published books, chapters and articles on new media, perceptual technics and affect, transversal theory and film, embodiment, technoculture and sexuality. She also works on and collaborates in many digital and new media projects.
Helen J. Burgess is Associate Professor of English at North Carolina State University, USA. She is Editor of the online journal Hyperrhiz: New Media Cultures and Coeditor of Electric Press, a born-digital monograph series with Punctum Books. She works in electronic literature, digital humanities and digital rhetorics.